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RESEARCH & RESOURCES

Corporate Culture Key to Success with Analytics says IBM, MIT Sloan Management Review

Organizational challenges -- not technology -- impede more rapid adoption.

Note: TDWI’s editors carefully choose vendor-issued press releases about new or upgraded products and services. We have edited and/or condensed this release to highlight key features but make no claims as to the accuracy of the vendor's statements.

New research released today by MIT Sloan Management Review and the IBM Institute for Business Value reports that organizational challenges, more so than technology hurdles, are holding companies back from fully integrating analytics across their enterprises.

According to a global survey of more than 4,500 executives, managers. and analysts from more than 120 countries and 30 industries, 44 percent of organizations say cultural barriers to enterprise-wide analytics adoption, such as the requirement for new leadership competencies and organizational resistance to new ideas, are the primary barriers. In contrast, only 24 percent point to technology concerns.

The new report, Analytics: The Widening Divide, builds on the findings from the original study by MIT SMR and IBM in 2010 to understand how companies are embedding analytics in more of the enterprise's processes and operations. The 2010 study found organizations fall into one of three levels of sophistication: basic users (referred to as Aspirationals), more Experienced users, and the most advanced users (referred to as Transformed). Year-to-year comparisons reveal that the more sophisticated users are expanding their deployment of analytics and widening the performance gap over their peers.

For instance, from 2010 to 2011 the percentage of respondents who cited a competitive advantage using analytics grew 23 percent for Transformed and 66 percent for Experienced organizations. These same organizations are more than twice as likely to substantially outperform their competitive peers. In contrast, Aspirational organizations lost ground in competitiveness, falling 5 percent since last year.

"Our new research shows that the early and aggressive adopters of analytics make significant gains in both performance and overall competitiveness," said Fred Balboni, IBM's global leader, Business Analytics and Optimization. "These indicators point to an urgent need for organizations to foster a data-oriented culture and drive an analytics strategy that embeds fact-based insights into decisions and processes at every level of the business."

"We've found that there are three legs to the competitive analytics stool: a data-oriented culture, information management competency, and analytics expertise," said David Kiron, executive editor for MIT Sloan Management Review. "Companies that have all three use analytics to deliver advantage in the marketplace."

The study found that the majority of organizations are using analytics to manage their financial and operational activities, but are less likely to rely on analytics-based insights for decisions in other key areas. On average, less than 25 percent of Aspirational organizations, and one-half of Transformed organizations, say they rely on data and analytics to make decisions involving customers, business strategy and human resources. Even Transformed organizations are not using analytics to their fullest potential, indicating ample opportunities for advanced users to do more and for less sophisticated organizations to create a competitive advantage by targeting analytics at key strategic activities.

While Transformed organizations use analytics more broadly across the organization than their peers, they differentiate themselves by intensely focusing on applying analytics to three areas:

  • Increasing the speed of decisions: Transformed organizations are more than three times more likely than Aspirationals to focus intensely on making better decisions, faster.

  • Managing enterprise risks: Eighty-six percent of Transformed organizations are addressing the full range of organizational risks that can impact their business, while none of the Aspirational organizations has the same level of focus. Transformed organizations are using analytics to not only mitigate, but also anticipate risks.

  • Engaging customers: Transformed organizations are outpacing their peers in leveraging the enormous amounts of data available today to understand and engage with their customers in new ways. Two-thirds of them are putting analytical insights into the hands of customer-facing employees to drive sales and productivity compared to one-fourth of Aspirationals.

The study examines how Transformed organizations are creating an advantage in the marketplace. The analysis shows that of all the characteristics exhibited by this group, their proficiency in six areas (represented by the percentage of Transformed companies that say they possess these characteristics) distinguished them the most:

  • Ability to analyze data: 78%

  • Ability to capture and aggregate data: 77%

  • Culture open to new ideas: 77%

  • Analytics as a core part of business strategy and operations: 72%

  • Embed predictive analytics into process: 66%

  • Insights available to those who need them: 65%

To access the full report, visit MIT SMR or IBM. Go here for more information on the MIT SMR/IBM joint New Intelligent Enterprise project.

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